Six bottles from one Sicily producer, composed in the cellar

A Sicily wine case is six bottles from one estate, put together by the producer as their own recommendation across the grapes and sites they farm. Browse cases from independent Sicilian growers and order directly from the cellar.

From Nero d'Avola on sun-baked plains to Etna's volcanic slopes, each case traces how one Sicilian grower reads their own vines.

Wine Colour

Dropdown arrow

Country

Dropdown arrow

Region (1)

Dropdown arrow

Price

Dropdown arrow

Sort by

Sort arrow
Sicilia

Sicily wine cases

A Sicily wine case is six bottles from one estate, composed by the grower as a single recommendation rather than mixed across producers. For an island this varied — from the volcanic soils of Etna in the north-east to the heat-baked plains of the interior where Nero d'Avola thrives — a case is a focused way to understand how one producer reads their own corner of Sicily. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the cases reflect that: you are taking home a grower's own selection, shipped directly from the cellar.

Sicily wines

Beyond the cases, Sicily's individual bottles span a wide range of styles: the deep, structured reds of Nero d'Avola and Nerello Mascalese sit alongside mineral whites from Catarratto and Grillo, with the island's warm climate and varied soils — limestone, clay, and volcanic rock — shaping each grape differently by region. The wines listed here come from growers working their own vineyards across the island.

View all wines from Sicilia

Sicily wineries

Sicily's independent producers range from long-established family estates to a younger generation returning to native grapes and traditional practices. Many farm small holdings on Etna's terraced slopes or across the western coastal plains, working varieties that grow nowhere else on the same scale. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

View all wineries from Sicilia

Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and several have reviewed Sicilian bottles featured on this page. Their ratings and notes are visible on each wine page and on the expert's own profile, building a transparent track record you can read before you order.

View all wine experts

Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Sicily wine case?

Choose the case you want, add it to your cart and pay securely by card or Klarna. The producer packs and ships the six bottles directly from their cellar. You receive a single box of six wines from one Sicilian estate, delivered to your door. Delivery typically takes 8 to 9 days on average, with a range of 4 to 14 days depending on where the producer is based.

What happens if a bottle arrives broken or doesn't taste right?

Send a photo to Free Grape Society customer support within 7 days of delivery. We will arrange a replacement or a refund. Because producers ship directly, quality issues are handled with the producer's direct involvement. Shared responsibility is built into how FGS works.

What is included in a Sicily wine case?

Every case contains exactly six bottles from one producer, selected by that grower as their own recommendation. The line-up varies by estate — one producer might show the same grape across different vineyard sites, another might walk you through their full range from white to red. The specific bottles are listed on the case page before you order.

How long does delivery take?

Average delivery is 8 to 9 days from order to door. The full range is 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location and your delivery address. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar, not from a central warehouse.

How do I find the right Sicily wine case for me?

Read the producer's description and the six bottles they have chosen. If the estate farms Etna's volcanic slopes, the case will reflect that terroir; if they work with Nero d'Avola in the south-east, the selection will sit in a different register entirely. You can also ask an independent wine expert through Free Grape Society if you want a personal recommendation before you choose.

Can I mix bottles from different Sicily producers into one case?

No — every wine case on Free Grape Society contains six bottles from one producer only. The case is the producer's own composed recommendation, which is what makes it a meaningful introduction to a single estate rather than a mixed sampler. If you want bottles from several Sicilian producers, you can add individual wines to your order separately.

Which Sicily wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have tasted and reviewed Sicilian wines. You can browse their profiles and read their notes on the wine pages, or fill in the form to ask an expert a direct question. Experts provide personal recommendations based on wines they have tasted themselves — there is no charge for the advice.

Why are Sicily wine cases always 6 bottles from one producer?

Six bottles from one estate is a deliberate choice, not a format constraint. A producer composes their case as a single recommendation — a way of showing how they think across their range, whether that means tracing one grape across different parcels or moving from white to red across the same growing season. Mixing bottles from several producers would dissolve that point of view entirely.

Can I buy a Sicily wine case if I live outside Sweden?

Free Grape Society currently ships to Sweden, and is launching in Germany and Denmark. Producers ship directly from their own cellars across Europe, so the availability of a specific case depends on where the producer is based and which markets they ship to. Check the case page for current delivery options for your country.

What's in a Sicily wine case

A Sicily wine case from Free Grape Society is six bottles from one producer, composed by that grower as their own recommendation across the wines they make. Because every case stays with a single estate, the six bottles hold together as a statement: you are tasting how one producer reads their own vineyards rather than working through a mixed selection from across the island. Some growers use the case to show the contrast between their native varieties — Nero d'Avola alongside Nerello Mascalese, or Grillo next to Catarratto — while others focus on a single grape across different expressions. The result is a short, guided way into a producer's range before you commit to buying individual bottles. Sicily's diversity of soils, altitudes and microclimates means that two estates farming the same variety can arrive at very different wines, which is part of what makes a single-producer case from the island worth exploring.

How Sicily producers compose their six bottles

Sicily's geography gives its producers an unusually wide palette to draw from. Estates on the volcanic slopes of Etna, where altitude and mineral-rich soils shape nervy, structured reds from Nerello Mascalese and textured whites from Carricante, make very different cases from growers working the lower western plains, where Nero d'Avola produces fuller, sun-warmed reds and Grillo and Catarratto give broad, aromatic whites. A producer composing their six often uses that range deliberately — moving between altitudes, between red and white, or between a younger drinking wine and something with more time in the cellar. Because the grower puts the case together themselves, it reflects their own sense of what represents their estate. Browse Sicily wine cases alongside cases from neighbouring regions such as Tuscany and Campania's producers in southern Italy to see how the island's style sits within the wider Italian picture.

Getting to know Sicily through one grower

For a region this varied, starting with one producer is a practical choice. Sicily spans nearly 25,000 square kilometres of coastline, interior plains, and volcanic mountain terrain, and the wines shift substantially depending on where the vines are grown. A case from an Etna producer introduces the cooler, altitude-driven side of the island; a case from the western interior shows the warmer, more concentrated character of low-altitude viticulture. Because each case on Free Grape Society comes from a single estate, you get a coherent introduction to one corner of Sicily rather than a general survey. Once you have a sense of a grower's style, moving to their individual bottles — available through Sicily wines — or exploring producers from other Italian regions such as Piedmont or Veneto becomes a more grounded next step. Independent wine experts also rate and review wines from Sicilian producers, and those reviews are visible on the individual wine pages.